De Bruyne's return will strike fear into Arsenal and Liverpool following Newcastle display

Jacque Talbot
Jacque Talbot
  • 13 Jan 2024 14:10 CST
  • 4 min read
Kevin De Bruyne, Man City, 2023/24
© ProShots

Time is a healer. It makes you forget what once was. It’s nature's way of getting over the breakdown of a relationship or the death of a loved one.

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In sport, and particularly football, things are a bit different. Those who have ventured off soon come back. Indeed, we have taken Kevin De Bruyne for granted this last season, forgetting the quality that the player possesses. We have been to enamored by the likes of Declan Rice, Martin Odegaard, and James Maddison that we have neglected the elegance of the veteran playmaker.

Being out injured, it’s easy to deride what a remarkable talent he is, that he can turn a game on his head and be the difference between a win and a loss. And he did precisely that against Newcastle. He came on and played for a little below 25 minutes with Newcastle ahead 2-1 against the backdrop of a raucous St James’ Park. Despite having almost six months out of Premier League action, De Bruyne slotted back in seamlessly, instantly reaffirming himself as the best central midfielder in the world today.

We talk about world-class often - it’s a cliché argument between fans, who all claim to use different metrics to allow said player to be acclaimed as such. For me, it’s not just about ability; otherwise, the likes of Alvaro Recoba and Mario Balotelli would be in the discussion. No, it’s about changing the narrative of a game through decision-making and guile. A world-class player makes up the important moments.

It’s easy to presume that De Bruyne, who has been outside public discourse for an extensive period, is merely a pawn in Pep Guardiola’s machine-like Man City squad, an expressionless entity who does nothing more than follow orders from the fervent Spaniard gesticulating on the touchline.

But tonight, we have rediscovered something incredible: Man City lifted up by their bootstraps, less so via the Guardiola playbook of possession-based football, but individual brilliance. De Bruyne is back, this time, a little bit older and wiser, with slicked-back hair and a score to settle. The Newcastle game is every bit of evidence that the likes of Arsenal and Liverpool should start to grow anxious over what the future holds in terms of the Premier League title race. Afterall, De Bruyne has the power to make his side's ambitions unstoppable.

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